Hawker wing oscillation

Perhaps it has something to do with a recent service bulletin for API winglets causing oscillations. It restricts them to a max operating altitude of FL340 till they can fix the issue.
 
All kidding aside... I would think that being on an aircraft upon which that is occurring would be pretty freaking terrifying.
 
Your average Hawker is happy to claw its way to 340. It's sort of like me walking around Detroit at 3am. This isn't where you're supposed to be, son.

Oh come on now. The newer 800XPs and higher are actually 370-410 airplanes. You're only doing .74-.76, but you're still up there...

Regarding the issue at hand; from what I've heard, it's an aileron rigging problem. Cable tensions get slack, and with the reduced pressure over the tips of the ailerons due to winglet design, you get the flutter.
 
Oh come on now. The newer 800XPs and higher are actually 370-410 airplanes. You're only doing .74-.76, but you're still up there....

GET OUT OF MY WAY!@ Oh, wait, I fly a PC-12 now.

Remind me to tell you the fun story of flying the Bitchjet at 450 for about 10 minutes. Sometime else. Like over beers. Suffice it to say that autopilot no-likey.
 
Watched it again. I have seen flutter progress pretty quickly with r/c models. I think if I saw that in flight, I would have changing hues in my shorts.
 
Flutter is no joke. There are many instances of this happening with improperly balanced/rigged elevators shearing the empennage off the aircraft (think V-tail Bonanza AD, but there are many other examples). The Rutan VariEZE canards were separating in flight after home builders were building them out of spec or too heavy.

Vibrational mechanics basically treats everything as oscillating mass spring systems (i.e. your airplane in flight is reduced to an abstraction as a mass bouncing up and down on a spring) and things like the natural frequency of oscillation are then mathematically derived. Flutter occurs when the surface pressure forces from the relative wind interact with the wing structure to excite oscillation at its natural frequency. At this point, each cycle feeds energy into the system and the oscillation gets bigger and bigger until something breaks.

Normally engineers figure out where this occurs and mark the Vne speed before that point. But all it takes is an unbalanced or out of spec elevator, or in this case improperly tensioned ailerons, and you can get flutter at much lower speeds because the natural frequency of the whole system is changed. This is why a lower Vne speed was part of the Bonanza AD.

Anyway, if that were me in that Hawker I would have needed a new pair of trousers. I can honestly say that flutter is one of the few topics that the more I learn about it in Aerospace Engineering, the less I wish I knew as a pilot!

 
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